24,415 research outputs found
Recommended from our members
Mechanical strain induces growth of vascular smooth muscle cells via autocrine action of PDGF.
The effect of cyclic mechanical strain on growth of neonatal rat vascular smooth muscle (VSM) cells were examined. Cells were grown on silicone elastomer plates subjected to cyclic strain (60 cycle/min) by application of a vacuum under the plates. A 48 h exposure to mechanical strain increased the basal rate of thymidine incorporation by threefold and increased cell number by 40% compared with cells grown on stationary rubber plates. Strain also increased the rate of thymidine incorporation in response to alpha-thrombin (from 15- to 33-fold), but not to PDGF. As determined by thymidine autoradiography, strain alone induced a fourfold increase in labeled nuclei at the periphery of dishes, where strain is maximal, and a 2-3-fold increase at the center of dishes. Strain appeared to induce the production of an autocrine growth factor(s), since conditioned medium from cells subjected to strain induced a fourfold increase in DNA synthesis in control cells. Western blots of medium conditioned on the cells subjected to strain indicate that the cells secrete both AA and BB forms of PDGF in response to strain. Northern blots of total cell RNA from cells exposed to strain for 24 h show increased steady-state level of mRNA for PDGF-A. Lastly, polyclonal antibodies to the AA form of PDGF reduced by 75% the mitogenic effect of strain and polyclonal antibodies to AB-PDGF reduced mitogenicity by 50%. Antibodies to bFGF did not significantly reduce the strain-induced thymidine incorporation. Thus, the mechanism of strain-induced growth appears to involve the intermediary action of secreted PDGF
The practice of flexible practice: discussion paper
The term flexible practice describes a way of addressing the needs of GPs to spend time with family or on activities outside their time at work. It has been reported that GPs spend an average of 51.4 hours working per week (CDHFS, 1996) and other data suggest that rural general practitioners work in excess of this. However, it is not just an issue of total working hours. Flexible practice also relates to issues such as quality of life, ability to take leave at short notice, the option to work parttime, ways of dispersing on call duties between different practitioners and health services, easy entry and graceful exit from practices. Other terms used to describe flexible practice arrangements are sustainable practice or sustainable model of practice. Women rural GPs, in particular, have noted that their greatest stress was the conflict between their career and their personal life (Tolhurst et al., 1998, Kilmartin et al., 2002) as they most often carry the main responsibility for the care and rearing of children (Levitt and McEwin, 2001). The three issues contributing to this stress were described as total hours worked, time on call and not finding enough time to keep up their professional knowledge (Tolhurst et al., 1998). Women also commented that the least satisfying part of medical practice was lack of time for family and personal life. Childcare options are often very limited in rural areas, which further contributes to the problem (Tolhurst et al., 1998). In response to these issues, âflexibility was identified as the key to the development and construction of policies and programs to support female GPs in rural and remote practiceâ (Levitt and McEwin, 2001). Lippert (2002) reiterates this from her own research, noting the need for greater flexibility in practice and training arrangements and valuing varied working styles and practice arrangements
Working from home: a solution to the employment of rural medical spouses? Discussion paper
An Investigation on Cooling of CZT Co-Planar Grid Detectors
The effect of moderate cooling on CdZnTe semiconductor detectors has been
studied for the COBRA experiment. Improvements in energy resolution and low
energy threshold were observed and quantified as a function of temperature.
Leakage currents are found to contribute typically 5 keV to the widths of
photopeaks.Comment: 14 pages, 9 figures. Accepted for publication in Nuclear Inst. and
Methods in Physics Research,
Similarity solutions for unsteady shear-stress-driven flow of Newtonian and power-law fluids : slender rivulets and dry patches
Unsteady flow of a thin film of a Newtonian fluid or a non-Newtonian power-law fluid with power-law index N driven by a constant shear stress applied at the free surface, on a plane inclined at an angle α to the horizontal, is considered. Unsteady similarity solutions representing flow of slender rivulets and flow around slender dry patches are obtained. Specifically, solutions are obtained for converging sessile rivulets (0 < α < π/2) and converging dry patches in a pendent film (π/2 < α < π), as well as for diverging pendent rivulets and diverging dry patches in a sessile film. These solutions predict that at any time t, the rivulet and dry patch widen or narrow according to |x|3/2, and the film thickens or thins according to |x|, where x denotes distance down the plane, and that at any station x, the rivulet and dry patch widen or narrow like |t|−1, and the film thickens or thins like |t|−1, independent of N
On the degrees of freedom of lattice electrodynamics
Using Euler's formula for a network of polygons for 2D case (or polyhedra for
3D case), we show that the number of dynamic\textit{\}degrees of freedom of the
electric field equals the number of dynamic degrees of freedom of the magnetic
field for electrodynamics formulated on a lattice. Instrumental to this
identity is the use (at least implicitly) of a dual lattice and of a (spatial)
geometric discretization scheme based on discrete differential forms. As a
by-product, this analysis also unveils a physical interpretation for Euler's
formula and a geometric interpretation for the Hodge decomposition.Comment: 14 pages, 6 figure
Experimental investigation of ventilation efficiency in a dentistry surgical room
As a response to the need to provide an acceptable thermal comfort and air quality in indoor environments, various ventilation performance indicators were developed over the years. These metrics are mainly geared towards air distribution, heat and pollutant removals. Evidence exists of influencing factors on these indicators as centered on ventilation design and operations. Unlike other indoor environments, health care environment requires better performance of ventilation system to prevent an incidence of nosocomial and other hospital acquired illnesses. This study investigates, using in-situ experiments, the ventilation efficiency in a dentistry surgical room. Thermal and hygric parameters were monitored on the air terminal devices and occupied zone over a period of one week covering both occupied and unoccupied hours. The resulting time-series parameters were used to evaluate the room's ventilation effectiveness. Also, the obtained parameters were benchmarked against ASHRAE 170 (2013) and MS1525 (2014) requirements for ventilation in health care environment and building energy efficiency respectively. The results show that the mean daily operative conditions failed to satisfy the provisions of both standards. Regarding effectiveness, the findings reveal that the surgical room ventilation is ineffective with ventilation efficiency values ranging between 0 and 0.5 indicating air distribution short-circuiting. These results suggest further investigations, through numerical simulation, on the effect of this short-circuiting on thermal comfort, infection risk assessments and possible design improvements, an endeavour that forms our next line of research inquiries
High Fill-Out, Extreme Mass Ratio Overcontact Binary Systems. X. The new discovered binary XY Leonis Minoris
The new discovered short-period close binary star, XY LMi, was monitored
photometrically since 2006. It is shown that the light curves are typical
EW-type and show complete eclipses with an eclipse duration of about 80
minutes. By analyzing the complete B, V, R, and I light curves with the 2003
version of the W-D code, photometric solutions were determined. It is
discovered that XY LMi is a high fill-out, extreme mass ratio overcontact
binary system with a mass ratio of q=0.148 and a fill-out factor of f=74.1%,
suggesting that it is on the late evolutionary stage of late-type tidal-locked
binary stars. As observed in other overcontact binary stars, evidence for the
presence of two dark spots on both components are given. Based on our 19
epoches of eclipse times, it is found that the orbital period of the
overcontact binary is decreasing continuously at a rate of
dP/dt=-1.67\times10^{-7}\,days/year, which may be caused by the mass transfer
from the primary to the secondary or/and angular momentum loss via magnetic
stellar wind. The decrease of the orbital period may result in the increase of
the fill-out, and finally, it will evolve into a single rapid-rotation star
when the fluid surface reaching the outer critical Roche Lobe.Comment: 19 pages, 4 figures, 9 table
The role of electron and phonon temperatures in the helicity-independent all-optical switching of GdFeCo
Ultrafast optical heating of the electrons in ferrimagnetic metals can result
in all-optical switching (AOS) of the magnetization. Here we report
quantitative measurements of the temperature rise of GdFeCo thin films during
helicity-independent AOS. Critical switching fluences are obtained as a
function of the initial temperature of the sample and for laser pulse durations
from 55 fs to 15 ps. We conclude that non-equilibrium phenomena are necessary
for helicity-independent AOS, although the peak electron temperature does not
play a critical role. Pump-probe time-resolved experiments show that the
switching time increases as the pulse duration increases, with 10 ps pulses
resulting in switching times of ~sim 13 ps. These results raise new questions
about the fundamental mechanism of helicity-independent AOS.Comment: 18 pages, 6 figures and supplementary material
- …
